KEEE5HI VVUII IXZl I engineers to form society By Tom Hinrichs A chapter of the Society of Women Engineers will soon be reality on the UNL campus, according to Holly Harding, a junior engineering major who is organizing the chapter. An organizational meeting will be held Feb. 26. Harding said 30 women are enrolled in the engineering college. Twelve women are chemical engineering majors, three are civil engineering majors, two are electrical engineering majors and one is an industrial engineering major. The remaining 1"2 women in the engineering college are undeclared. Harding said women in engineering have no group to identify with other than the societies in their specialized fields. The societies now available in the engineering college fail short of providing for a womans needs, Harding said. Harding said the main purposes of the proposed society are to provide a group where women can meet other women in engineering, to help with the problems of being a woman in engineering and to provide professional ' information to women engineers. Harding said the Society of Women Engineers is divided into two sections, professional and student. There are 48 student chapters in 22 states. There is neither a student nor professional chapter in Nebraska, Harding said. Fifteen of the 30 women in the engineering college are freshmen. Harding said women in engineering field is a recent development; one per cent of the engineers in America are women. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNI VERSITY OF ARIZONA program, will offer June 30 to August 9, anthropology, art, education, folk lore, geography, history, govern ment, language and literature. Tuition and fees, $190; board and room with Mexican family $245. Write to GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL. 413 New Psychology. University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. MEET A MILLION-DOLLAR MAN Here's an opportunity to join a dynamic sales organization. You will present a highly successful program to college students in a professional setting. You should average $ 1 0,000 $ 1 5,000 your f i rst year. College Agency Management will interview on campus. Register now at the placement center and meet a million-dollar man. FEB. 12th AT 7:30 P.M. PRICK: $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 (Ton ld. MAGICIANS OF BASKETBALL HURRY, feiofflu 0p 12 Moor fill ALL SEATS RESERVED 48 teams to compete in 75 Trivia Bowl Who were Superman's real parents? Such trivia questions will perplex at least one of 48 teams when Trivia Bowl competition, sponsored by the Interfraternity and Panhellenic Councils, begins elimination rounds Tuesday in the Nebraska Union main lounge at 6:30 p.m., according to Bowl Chairman Doug Kristensen. Kristensen, a member of Acacia fraternity, said that although anyone could form a team, most of the teams are from fraternities and sororities. Elimination rounds will be run on Tuesday and Thursday nights for at least three weeks, Kristensen said, before quarter and semi-final matches begin. Four matches will be held each night of competition between randomly paired teams, he said. "We hope to have more than 5,000 questions available to use in the competition," Kristensen said. Three teams will make it to the final round of competition to be held on March 12, during Greek Week. Round robin competition will determine the final winner, Kristensen said. The electronic scoring board for the competition, which is styled after the old television "GE College Bowl" show, is being made by UNL students, Kristensen reported. Schematic plans for construction are being drawn by members of Triangle, an engineering oriented fraternity, while the actual construction will be done by a member of Acacia. . Fraternity and sorority chapter advisers will serve as masters of ceremony for the matches, Kristensen said. n re n i 04 n n n nri C fi?W ?9)n TOMORROW, DAVE WAND, A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE FROM HEWLETT-PACKARD WILL BE IN THE STORE FROM 9 AM TO 4 PM TO ANSWER ANY QUESTION'S YOU HAVE ABOUT CALCULATORS. The HP-35 Electronic Slide Rule. Performs all be. sic arithmetic, trig and log calculations automatically. Has an Addressable Memory, displays 10 digits in fixed decimal or scien tific notation, automatically positions decimal point throughout its 200-decade range. Cost, $$? Now$195 The HP-45 Advanced Scientific. Performs 44 scientific M; vi tS vector arithmetic. 'Q J rectanoularto g... CS X x,v 1 1 1 t;ci lanusioiiuaiuucii ation. Has 9 Addressable v. ' - . , x i" . a a i ,yjr r ' 'w "V. 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